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Corrupt Government Title: ‘Do Not Resist’: A chilling look at the normalization of warrior cops The haunting thing about the new policing documentary Do Not Resist is what it doesnt show. There are no images of cops beating people. No viral videos of horrifying shootings. Sure, there are scenes from the Ferguson protests in which riot cops deploy tear gas. But theres no blood, no Tasings, no death. Yet when it was over, I had to force myself to exhale. What makes this movie so powerful is its terrifying portrayal of the mundanities of modern policing. I watched the movie weeks ago, but there are scenes that still flicker in my head. We all remember the clashes between police and protesters in Ferguson. Weve seen the photos. We saw the anger and the animus exchanged across the protest lines. What we didnt see were the hours and hours before and after those moments. We didnt see the MRAPs and other armored vehicles roll in, one at a time, slowly transforming an American town into a war zone. We didnt hear the clomp of combat boots on asphalt in the quiet hours of the early morning, interrupted only by fuzzy dispatches over police radio. Its one thing to show an MRAP a vehicle built for war, and for a very specific purpose in a very specific type of war being misused after a small-town police agency obtained it from the Defense Department. Do Not Resist takes you to the base where those vehicles are stored. A camera trained on the window captures hundreds of MRAPs rows and rows and rows of them scrolling by, all destined for a police agency somewhere in America. Meanwhile, an Army specialist explains how the troops who use the vehicles get hours and hours of training before theyre entrusted to drive the trucks on a battlefield. The Pentagon then gives the trucks to police agencies to use on U.S. streets with no accompanying training at all. Sometimes, the specialist says, a police agency will find a body part in one of the trucks. They try to avoid that. But after all, these are machines of war. The film crew then takes a ride with a small-town sheriff as he drives his hulking new MRAP through business districts and quiet neighborhoods that is, once he figures out how to operate it. The most disturbing thing about this scene isnt the truck itself, or the striking images of the truck in the town, or even the sheriffs statement that it will probably mostly be used for drug raids. The most disturbing thing is that it simply doesnt occur to the sheriff that the footage might be disturbing. He has no problem letting a film crew show this massive contraption built to withstand roadside bombs in a military convoy lumbering through his small town, because the notion that military vehicles arent appropriate for domestic policing is foreign to him. Then theres the drug raid. Its one thing to read about a dynamic entry drug raid in which the police mistakenly or intentionally kill someone, or in which someone mistakenly or intentionally kills a police officer. Its awful and tragic and unnecessary. Do Not Resist doesnt show one of those. It instead shows the sort of drug raid thats far more common. The movie depicts the raid from the beginning, as the officers from the Richland County Sheriffs Department tactical team are meeting to discuss strategy. Some are wearing T-shirts with the tactical teams logo. Its a human skull imposed over two crossed AR-15s. There are no children at the residence, the lead officer assures his colleagues. (There were.) There would be a significant quantity of illegal drugs at the house, another says. (There werent.) The tactical team then proceeds to raid the home of a black family in Richland County. Most officers storm the front door with their guns while one shatters some side windows as a distraction. Minutes go by. The officers body language eventually shows signs of frustration as their search for contraband continues to come up empty. Finally, someone finds a book bag with traces of marijuana at the bottom not enough to smoke, much less sell. They arrest a young black man with long braids for possession. I never one time said youre a bad person, the lead officer tells his arrestee, with an odd cordiality. I just have a job to do, and you happen to be in the middle of it. The officer also seems to know that the man is a student at a local technical college. Hes working toward a degree in construction. The man also runs a landscaping company to help pay for his education. The man later tells the officer that he was on his way to pick up some lawnmowers that morning. Knowing that hes about to be arrested, he asks the officer if he could tell his employee that he was arrested and wont be able to pick up the lawnmowers. He then gives the officer $876 in cash and asks it to give it to his employee to go pick up the mowers, along with a weed-eater. Instead, the officer confiscates the money under civil asset forfeiture laws. There is no obvious connection between the money and the pot residue. The man volunteered the cash, mostly because he didnt want his arrest to hurt his business. In doing so, he provided ample evidence that the cash had nothing to do with illegal activity. Still, if unchallenged, the $876 will go back to the Richland County Sheriffs Department, even if the man is never charged with a crime. The cost of hiring an attorney for such a challenge would likely exceed $876. Meanwhile, the mans father asks the officers whether the police would pay for the windows they just shattered. The lead officer tells him that breaking the windows was a tactic, then adds, The moral of the story is, dont sell drugs from your residence. Perhaps realizing that he had no evidence for what he had just accused the man of doing, he tried to correct himself. I didnt say you were actually doing it, I just said said you were associated with
and then theres some mumbling. The striking thing about the footage is, again, the utter mundanity of the raid. A family was just violently raided over an immeasurable amount of pot. A man was arrested over that pot. The money he needed for his business was taken from him. Yet theres no shame or embarrassment from the officers. Theres no panic that the whole thing was captured on video. Thats when it hits you. They dont think theyve made a mistake. This is what they do. The lead officers later tells the camera, matter-of-factly, that the raid turned up a personal use amount of marijuana. Perhaps realizing that he was also on camera back at the police station promising a much larger stash of drugs, he adds, It happens. Drug warrants are, you know, 50-50. The documentary also eschews voice-overs and talking heads and simply lets law enforcement officers speak for themselves. You dont need a civil rights activist or ACLU attorney to tell you about the threats posed by militaristic, aggressive policing when law enforcement officers can make the point unintentionally and thus more powerfully and persuasive when theyre speaking freely. For example, the directors attended one of the many SWAT competitions across the country. One SWAT cop officer reflected on his first raid. I was just trying not to smile. I thought it was so fun. I thought it was so cool, he says. Since then, he says, he always loves to watch the SWAT pups (his term for first-year SWAT officers) on their first raid. Theyre always just smiling from ear to ear. Theyre just on top of the world. At risk of stating the obvious, the officers hes describing are about to stage an armed, potentially lethal invasion of a private residence. Fittingly, the most chilling scene in the movie doesnt take place on a city street, or at a protest, or during a drug raid. It takes place in a conference room. Its from a police training conference with Dave Grossman, one of the most prolific police trainers in the country. Grossmans classes teach officers to be less hesitant to use lethal force, urge them to be willing to do it more quickly and teach them how to adopt the mentality of a warrior. Jeronimo Yanez, the Minnesota police officer who shot and killed Philando Castille in July, had attended one of Grossmans classes called The Bulletproof Warrior (though that particular class was taught by Grossmans business partner, Jim Glennon). In the class recorded for Do Not Resist, Grossman at one point tells his students that the sex they have after they kill another human being will be the best sex of their lives. The room chuckles. But hes clearly serious. Both partners are very invested in some very intense sex, he says. Theres not a whole lot of perks that come with this job. You find one, relax and enjoy it. Grossman closes the class with a (literal) chest-pounding motivational speech that climaxes with Grossman telling the officers to find an overpass overlooking the city they serve. He urges them to look down on their city and know that theyve made the world a better place. He then urges them to grip the overpass railing, lean forward and let your cape blow in the wind. The room gives him a standing ovation. Later, the documentary crew returns to the home of the South Carolina family that had been raided. The man the police arrested has been released from custody. I thought they were looking for a terrorist, says the mans mother. They tore down my house, my son went to jail, for a gram-and-a-half of marijuana that they shook out the bottom of a book bag. In the background, a TV is tuned to live coverage of the funeral of South Carolina state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, one of nine members of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church whom Dylann Roof was charged with murdering in 2015. Horrific as that South Carolina crime was, such incidents are thankfully rare. Crimes like that, the vicious beatings caught on viral videos and shootings by police officers get most of the attention and they ought to get more. But its the mundanities of the drug war, the criminal-justice system and everyday policing that are far more destructive, pervasive and pernicious. And thats what makes this movie so important. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 11.
#1. To: Deckard (#0)
(Edited)
The Army's giving them away. Where's the harm in getting one for the local police department? Oh, wait. Because they look scary, right? Where have I heard that argument before?
Oh, wait. Because they look scary, right? For example. When the "authorities" are too scary, the people at first are whining, then get silent, and than they cannot take it anymore. Was your orgasm so great?
If you understood any of that, please explain it to me
.never mind, forget it.
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